In 1987, a space phenomenon sends NASA astronaut William "Buck" Rogers and his space shuttle off course and freezes his life support systems for 500 years. In 2491, he awakens aboard the fla... Read allIn 1987, a space phenomenon sends NASA astronaut William "Buck" Rogers and his space shuttle off course and freezes his life support systems for 500 years. In 2491, he awakens aboard the flagship Draconia, under the command of Princess Ardala and her henchman Kane, a former nativ... Read allIn 1987, a space phenomenon sends NASA astronaut William "Buck" Rogers and his space shuttle off course and freezes his life support systems for 500 years. In 2491, he awakens aboard the flagship Draconia, under the command of Princess Ardala and her henchman Kane, a former native of Earth. The Draconians repair Buck's shuttle, but secretly plant a homing beacon aboar... Read all
- Supervisor
- (as John Dewey-Carter)
- Narrator
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Drunk
- (uncredited)
- Ball Guest
- (uncredited)
- Wrather
- (uncredited)
- Ball Guest
- (uncredited)
- Draconia PA Announcer
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Council Spectator
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaTo cut costs, some footage and various props were used from Glen A. Larson's series Battlestar Galactica (1978). Even some of the concept designs from Battlestar Galactica were used. The Terran starfighters on Buck Rogers were originally designed as the Colonial Vipers for Battlestar Galactica, but Larson had opted for a design closer than the X-Wing fighters from Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977) Larson then used the unused designs for Buck Rogers.
- GoofsBuck says that the damage caused by hostile fire to his ship had not oxidized and therefore was new, but oxidation requires oxygen which absolutely isn't available in space.
- Quotes
[Buck and Wilma, flying Starfighters, witness Hatchet Fighters - both unaware that they are Draconian craft - slaughter a small squadron of Starfighters]
Capt. William "Buck" Rogers: [shutting off his fighter's Combat Computer] Colonel, I'm switching to Manual and see if I can start dishing out what we've been taking!
Colonel Wilma Deering: Buck Rogers, I'm ordering you back to the base!
Capt. William "Buck" Rogers: [ignoring Wilma and sensing a Hatchet Fighter maneuvering to attack] Now then, let's see how you like a little old-fashioned Red Dogging!
[Buck outmaneuvers the Hatchet Fighter, then spots another and blasts it to pieces]
Capt. William "Buck" Rogers: One sacked. Six to go.
Capt. William "Buck" Rogers: [blasting a second enemy craft] Gotcha!
[after blasting two more Hatchet Fighters, Buck notices two others closing on Wilma]
Capt. William "Buck" Rogers: Colonel, take it down! Straight down! Then hit your retros!
Colonel Wilma Deering: [oblivious to the ineffectiveness of her Combat Computer] I can't! It's against all principles of modern aerial combat!
[the Hatchet Fighters open fire, but Buck blasts them from high port side]
Capt. William "Buck" Rogers: Ha! That's called punching your linebackers.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Harmontown: Soft on Hitler, Hard on Dicks (2018)
COMMENTARY: Buck Rogers (the character) was originally conceived by Philip Francis Nowlan in 1928. This pilot double-episode (89 minutes) was originally released to theaters in March, 1979, as "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century" six months before it debuted on TV as the debut of the series, renamed "Awakening." In any case, the pilot (and series) is quite cartoony and the effects are downright lame compared to the awe-inspiring "Star Trek: The Motion Picture," which came out (at the end of) the same year. Not to mention the original Star Wars Trilogy that was popular at the time. Heck, for the most part, the F/X don't even hold up to The Original Series of Star Trek that ran from 1966-1969. No kidding.
This doesn't mean, however, that this pilot isn't entertaining. It is to a degree; just don't expect the maturity or quality of Star Trek (TOS). Star Trek is dramatic science-fiction whereas Star Wars is fantasy packaged as science-fiction, which is 'space fantasy.' "Awakening" (and the series in general) tries to walk the line between these two and ends up being inferior to both. But, again, this doesn't mean it's not entertaining in its comic booky way.
While the script for "Awakening" is okay at best (and most of the ensuing episodes as well), the main protagonists and most of the guest stars are outstanding. Gil Gerard in the titular role, for instance, is just as effective as William Shatner as Captain Kirk, maybe even more so, if that were possible. And then there's Erin Gray as Col. Deering, one of the hottest space babes in the history of film or television. Not to mention, Pamela Hensley has the requisite "looks that kill" as the oversexed antagonist, Ardala (although she doesn't personally trip my trigger; she's just not curvy enough). The rest of the series features a gazillion female guests who are often more beautiful than these two, especially the 1st season. So "Buck Rogers" scores well on the female front.
The movie is hard to rate because, on the one hand, the cheese-factor is so high with the comic book tone, flimsy sets, dubious special effects and banal storytelling, but the main protagonists and guest stars are outstanding and somehow pull off the material. It's amazing, but true. There's also something to be said for the nostalgic and innocent style of the pilot and series. Nevertheless, I can't in good conscience give "Awakening" (aka "Buck Rogers in the 20th Century") a higher rating.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime2 hours
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 4:3
Contribute to this page
